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HomeMy WebLinkAboutDon Dillon, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Yoe Special to The Eagle Don Dillon considers himself to be a lucky fellow. As he puts it: "I have been very fortunate wherever I've been during my life, including my time in Warld War II. But I'm particularly fortunate to have moved to Brazos County and to be accepted by the people in this community." Hisjourney began in 1921 on afarm near Oskaloosa, Iowa. "I was born on our farm and was told I began life as a big baby. That is one characteristic that I have had all my life -big." Big enough to be a football star in high school and college. "My dad worked for the Des Moines Register & Tribune and we moved to Des Moines for high school. I and my brothers all played football for Roosevelt High and later for Drake University there in Des Moines. I graduated from high school in 1938 and enrolled at Drake. "I took a year off from football to recover from a broken leg and to get stronger. My first two years at Drake were innon-law, but the last three years I spent in law school. I played football for Drake my last four years there. My last year, 1942-43, I had volunteered for the Army but was allowed to finish my law degree. I was married with a child and another on the way when I left for the service." Dillon also received the award for the highest academic standing by a graduating athlete his last year at Drake. Pretty impressive when you consider he was in law school, playing football, working in his spare time and raising a family, all at the same time. Dillon was sent to Seymour Johnson Field in North Carolina for basic training and officer training. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant. From there he was sent to Yale to study communications codes and other material that required atop-secret classification. "When we completed Yale and received our top- secret clearance, we received orders to ship out to England. We went over on an old English ship, and it was the roughest trip I've ever taken. As an officer you had guard detail duty but I was the only one able to stand. There were a bunch of sick soldiers on that ship. "We landed and were sent to London during the middle of the German blitz. They were bombarding London daily with rockefs. If you couldn't make it to a ons about our aircraft operations were sent, received and secure. When General Eisenhower moved his headquarters to Rheems, we moved with him. We were in a building next to a crashed German fighter plane, which was a constant reminder that we were handling all of General Eisenhower's flights in and out of Rheems. "When the war moved, so did we. We were moving to Belgium when the Battle of the Bulge started. We were all now carrying guns, primarily because of infiltration of Germans in American uniforms. We set up at Namur, Belgium. Because of the equipment we had to erect, it was pretty obvious what we were. On more than one occasion we had German planes penetrate our anti-aircraft batteries. "When that happened, all we had to defend with were rifles and my .45-caliber pistol. We knew we couldn't do much damage, but there we were with rifles and pistols in hand firing away. Fortunately, they didn't damage us and I doubt we ever damaged them. "While in Belgium we had to dismantle the German system they had left behind, which required cutting down the poles that were strung with their wire. We cut the poles, but they wouldn't fall until I pulled and pushed at one. When that one started to fall they all fell, burying me in the mud. It dislocated my knee and I was sent to a hospital. I was told I could go home, but I asked to stay because the war wasn't over yet. That knee continued to give me problems until Dr. Bramhall fixed it a few years ago. "When the war ended, we had a big celebration and I finally got my orders to come home. The orders didn't specify how I was to get home, just that I could go. I had one of my guys drive me to Paris, where I eventually caught a flight home. I walked into rfVy home~without anyone knowing I was coming, but they. were glad to see me." It was then that Dillon was able to meet his second daughter for the first time. Dillon began to practice law in Mercedes, Texas. He moved to Bryan in the early 60's, where he practiced law with the firm of Dillon, Giesenschlag and Sharp and owned and operated Brazos County Abstract Company until his retirement. "I have been fortunate, but especially when I moved to this community." Don Dillon s name can be found on the Brazos galley Veterans Memorial. Far more information, to